Sunday, February 18, 2018

Potato Harvesting in New Brunswick

My mother, Elva Crabtree Harris Rodriguez (1914-1998), was born into a farming family in New Brunswick, Canada. I have an idea that her memories of farm life were not the fondest--she had little use for farm animals or pets, and when I was planning to move to Canada all she could think of was the hard work. And the potatoes!

I came across this old 1955 video* of potato harvesting in the Grand Falls region of Victoria County, New Brunswick. It looks like things hadn't changed so much since the 1930s and 1940s--not so long after my mother would have taken part in the harvests in Beaconsfield, just a 40 minute drive by car today.

Here is a comment on this YouTube video: I remember my grandfather working like this. All the neighbouring families came to help harvest, and then helped the next neighbour, and so on.
Hard work. Bending over all day. I remember very sore backs, and very dry hands.



For contrast, here is a more modern approach to potato harvesting, this time just across the border in Aroostook County, Maine, where the Crabtree family also lived.




*****

* Thanks to Wayne DeLong of the Facebook group, Carleton County Genealogy and Family Trees, for sharing the first video. 

Saturday, February 17, 2018

A Little More About the Wedlock Family

My great great Aunt Cora Bell Ellis (1862-1939) married Silas Filetas Wedlock (1860-1955). The Wedlock family is a fascinating one and I have come across some interesting things about them. So that I can keep track of what information I have found, I'd like to put some of it here.

This is a message board on Ancestry.com about the Wedlocks: https://www.ancestry.com/boards/surnames.wedlock/1.9.16/mb.ashx. Just in case this link doesn't work for non-members, I'd like to quote a pertinent bit from Ancestry member Kathy Callaway (I can't seem to find a way to get in touch with her, and if she sees this I beg her pardon for quoting without permission). This comment was in answer to a query about the Wedlock name.

Came across your message - re: Missouri/Iowa Wedlocks: some in my family - here's what I have so far, some of it passed on from a family Bible (one I have not personally seen); some from IGI records online, some from my mother.

John Wedlock seems to be the first one over in our line: b. 1812 Edinburgh Scotland to unknown Wedlock who is assumed to be one of the Wedlocks of St. Hilary, Cornwall (there are many). Married Honora (later called herself, as his widow, 'Woodlock'), of Limerick, Ireland. John's father died sometime between 1815 and 1818, for Honora remarried to a John Law in 1820. They lived in Dublin, where he was a schoolmaster. Son John Wedlock from her first marriage ran away to America when he was 16, ca. 1827-28. He is in the 1830 census for Argyle, Washington County, NY, married to Catherine Runey from Cavan County, Ireland.

Their first child, James Alexander, was born in Albany, New York/ Bennington, Wyoming County, NY on Dec. 22, 1830, when John was only 18. John had two other children with Catherine Runey: Ellen, born in Waterford, PA, and John Richard, b. PA.


John and Catherine are divorced by the 1840 Census, and both are in Harbour Creek, Erie Co., PA. John has "1 female" living with him. 

In the 1850 census he is in Millville, PA, married to his 2nd wife, Mary (Bogart?), of PA. In the 1860 census they have one ten-year-old child, Charles, with them. In the 1870 census, no John Wedlock. In the 1880 census, he is in Pilot Rock, Cherokee County, Iowa, married to his 3rd wife, Rosetta Brooks, who was b. 1843 in Bennington, Wyoming Co., NY - where apparently they had married about 14 years earlier, for with them in Pilot Rock are their two daughters, aged 14 and 12, both born in Bennington, NY.


John is a shoemaker in Pilot Rock. John is killed by a tornado in Quinby, IA nr. Cherokee on Jan. 19, 1894; Rosetta dies the next year. 

Millville, PA was a Quaker town: at some point various Wedlock families became Mormons:certainly by the time they reach Iowa; and many were drawn to Missouri, especially to follow John Smith Jr. in the RDLS movement, later in the 19th century.

James Alexander Wedlock, son of John and lst wife, Catherine Runey, is my great-great grandfather on my mother's side. He, too, lives in Millville, PA - with Anna Purce, the lst of his three wives; and at age 20 has had five children, all born in Millville: Wm. (died young); Lavina O., b. 1852; Rosa, 1854; John R., b. 1857, and Silas Filetas, my great-grandfather, b. 1860. When drafted for the Civil War, he pays another man $100 to serve for him, as he has four small children to support. But in 1864 he is in Pilot Rock, Iowa, near Cherokee, married to his 2nd wife, Helen Gray. 

He homesteads 80 acres - the town of Cherokee now sits on it. James and Helen are still in Pilot Rock in 1870 census, and in 1880; she died in 1886 and is buried in Deloit, IA, which was founded by Mormons. James is 56 when she dies. He remarries for a 3rd time: Eliza VanDyke, and they live in Rich Hill, Missouri. In 1891 he is baptized into the RLDS Church and in 1893 is an ordained Elder. At least one child from first marriage has also come west from Millville: Silas Filetas Wedlock, my great-grandfather.

He lived in 3 towns in Iowa, a number of towns in Missouri, and in Aitkin County, Minnesota; married Cora Bell Ellis in 1879 in Cherokee, IA and had three children: LeRoy Ellsworth, my grandfather, b. June 1880 in Cherokee; Anna, b. 1885, who died at 5 1/2 years, and Harold Arden Wedlock, b. 1900 in Deloit, IA. It is Harold's family who has many descendants now in Missouri, I believe. (I remember seeing Harold and Ethel many times - they were at my high-school graduation in Minnesota - Harold d. in the 1970s.)

Silas and his son, LeRoy, are both working for the railroad in Deloit, IA, in the 1900 Census, when Harold is 3 months old. James Alexander, Silas' father, and his 3rd wife wife Eliza are there, too. When Silas and Cora Bell move north to homestead in Aitken County, Minnesota in about 1911, James Alexander, aged 81, comes too. lives two more years and is buried in Aitkin County. Eliza died in 1935 in Independence, Missouri.

My grandfather Leroy Ellsworth Wedlock married Carrie Usher (still checking date) in Aitkin County not long after his arrival with father Silas and grandfather James Alexander and families ca.19ll. The Usher family had come up by Conestogas from Linn Co., IA, to Aitkin County in 1898 to homestead, and Carrie had become a teacher at the age of 16 in 1901, three years after their arrival. She had been teaching for several years by the time she met and married LeRoy Wedlock. Neither of them was to live long.

In 1913, James Alexander Wedlock died. In 1921 LeRoy and Carrie, now with five daughters (the youngest to live only for 18 months), moved to Missouri to do with his faith in the RDLS Church. Five years later, in 1926, he died at the age of 46 - he is buried in Cameron, MO. Carrie and their four surviving daughters returned to Aitkin County, MN, where she, herself, died three years later (am currently checking date).

LeRoy's father, 'Sal' Filetas, lived to the age of 95 and died only in 1955. Cora Bell had died in 1939 in Independence, MO. Silas lived with son Harold in Hamilton, MO, for a while after she died, then in 1940, at the age of 80, met and married Hattie Burnett in Hamilton. Several years later, they divorced; Silas lived with Harold again, this time in Maryville, MO, and in 1955 was in a nursing home in Clearmont, MO (but used to run away frequently, my mother told me, to visit his grand-daughter, my mother's sister Jeannetta, in Fort Dodge, Iowa). He is buried next to Cora Bell in Independence.

Harold's daughters and their families still live in various places throughout Missouri. Much is known about the Ushers; not yet much about the Wedlocks. I hope this helps towards piecing it all together.

NOTE: I have seen messages regarding Charles, mother Mary - I see these names in our PA family details, above.

kcallaway





Monday, February 5, 2018

In Memory of Stanley W. and Dorothy Stevens Thomas

My second cousin Stanley Thomas died in 2014; his wife, Dorothy Stevens Thomas, died last year. Here are their obituaries. (Thanks to my cousin Nancy Kinney for forwarding this information).


Obituary: Stanley W. Thomas, 91, of Moscow [Idaho] 
May 10, 2014
This obituary appeared in the Lewiston (ID) Tribune and the Moscow (ID) Pullman (WA) Daily News.






Longtime Moscow resident Stanley W. Thomas died peacefully at home Wednesday. He was 91.
Stan was born in Greenville Junction, Maine, on April 14, 1923, to Marian and Hayward Thomas. He graduated from Guilford High School in 1941 and from the University of Maine at Orono in 1947.

World War II interrupted his college education and despite his pacifist leanings, Stan volunteered for the Army Air Corps Reserve in 1943. As a transport pilot he flew Douglas C-47 aircraft over the Himalayan mountain range, or "The Hump" as it was often described.

Stan entered Boston University's School of Theology in 1947 receiving a seminary degree in 1950, and later completing his doctorate in Sociology of Religion.

During his graduate years, he married the love of his life, Dorothy Stevens of Kingston, N.H.

Stan was hired by the First United Methodist Church's Wesley Foundation in 1953 to work with University of Idaho students. In 1957, he became director of the Campus Christian Center, teaching courses in world religions, the Old and New Testament, ethics, and courtship and marriage, among others. He remained there until his retirement in 1989. His work at the CCC could not have been accomplished without the tireless assistance of his administrative secretary of 25 years, Yvonne Slutz. Some of his fondest memories of campus life were kindled in "The Burning Steak," during "the activist years" of the 1960s and '70s, where he developed lifelong bonds with many students.

Sometimes referred to as the "sad-eyed Bostonian," Thomas was active in politics and civic affairs. He was a member of Idaho's Human Rights Commission and was named the first recipient of the Rosa Parks Human Rights Achievement Award in 1994. A member of Moscow's Peace Band, Thomas could often be seen at community events playing his trumpet. He served on many UI committees and organizations.

Stan had numerous intellectual interests, including philosophy, modern political and social thought, social ethics and comparative religions. He had a passionate desire for the world to become a more peaceful place, and lived his life engaged in community participation and social action. Stan loved music, particularly classical and jazz.

His favorite place, in addition to New England, was his cabin at Glengary Bay on Lake Pend Oreille. Thanks to the Heitman family, many wonderful summers were spent with children and grandchildren fishing, sailing and canoeing on the scenic lake.

Stan is survived by his wife, Dorothy; his four children, Susan (married to Jay Shelledy), Julie (married to the late Bill Duncombe), Steven (married to Jeana Martin) and Robert; and seven grandchildren. A celebration of life will be noon Saturday, May 24, at the First United Methodist Church in Moscow.

You are invited to express your appreciation for Stan by actively participating in your community. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to the Campus Christian Center, 822 Elm in Moscow, and/or the War Resisters League, 339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012, or online at warresisters.org/win.
Stan is survived by his wife, Dorothy; his four children, Susan (married to Jay Shelledy), Julie (married to the late Bill Duncombe), Steven (married to Jeana Martin) and Robert; and seven grandchildren. A celebration of life will be noon Saturday, May 24, at the First United Methodist Church in Moscow.


Moscow-Pullman Daily News
Dorothy Stevens Thomas, 92, of Moscow 

Jun 29, 2017



Dorothy Stevens Thomas, 92, died peacefully at her home in Moscow on Friday night, June 23, 2017.

Dorothy was born in 1925 on a dairy farm in southern New Hampshire, the oldest child of J. Edward and Anne Stevens. She graduated from Sanborn Seminary in 1943 and the University of New Hampshire in 1947, majoring in history.

Upon graduation she accepted a high school teaching position in Norton, Mass. She met her future husband, Stanley Thomas, when they both arrived late to a Student Ecumenical Christian Conference. They were married in Kingston, N.H., in 1949 and lived together for nearly 65 years, until Stan's death in 2014.

Following their marriage they moved to Boston, Mass., where Stan was completing his doctoral degree. Dorothy took a position at the Cokesbury Bookstore in the city, riding her bike to and from. Her memories of "17 Yarmouth," their studio apartment in Boston, were precious and dear.

In 1953 Stan accepted a position with the Wesley Foundation as a campus pastor, and they packed up their '47 Chevy and headed west to Moscow. She raised four children and returned to school earning a master's degree from the University of Idaho.

Her Katharine Hepburn-like looks and signature laugh often brought her unintended attention.

Civic engagement was always a priority in her life. She was active in the League of Women Voters, United Methodist Church, the Democratic Party, UNICEF, Faculty Discussion group and Garden Club. She was an avid reader and treasured her time with her book club and poetry group.

When Dorothy's macular degeneration impeded her ability to read, she took great pleasure in books on tape and was grateful to any and all who would read to her. She chose to live life "half full" and encouraged others to do the same.

Another passion was her garden. Blessed with a "green thumb," she enjoyed the beauty and fragrance nature provides. She was an excellent cook and enjoyed giving dinner parties. She understood the value of bringing people together to enjoy a delicious meal and lively discussion. Over the years, she and Stan opened their home to numerous students or anyone needing time to determine next steps in life.

She remained intellectually engaged to the end, paying astute attention to what was happening in our world. She was always ready to discuss the latest local, national and international issue of the day. She cared deeply about the planet, attentive to conservation, recycling and water use, with the possible exception of her garden.

Dorothy is survived by her brother, Alan Stevens of Kingston, N.H.; and sister, Lois Hatch of Brentwood, N.H. A brother, Lawrence Stevens, preceded her in death. She is survived by her four children, Susan Thomas Shelledy of Sandpoint, Julie Thomas Duncombe of Syracuse, N.Y., Steven Thomas of Lewiston and Robert Thomas of Moscow; as well as numerous grandchildren and one great-grandson.


A celebration of life will be scheduled later in the summer. Donations may be made to Sojourners, hospice or the charity of your choice.

*****

My connection to Stanley: